BYRON. MINNESOTA 
13 
Climbing Vines Cherries 
BITTERSWEET 
A native climber with handsome, glossy 
foliage and large clusters of beautiful 
orange-crimson berries. 35c and 50c 
each. 
CLEMATIS JACKMANNI 
The most beautiful and showy Clematis 
with deep velvety purple flowers. 
Strong potted plants, ready to bloom. 
65c each/ 2 for $1.20. 
ENGELMAN'S IVY 
The only vine which clings to brick, 
stone or stucco. Foliage turns to bril¬ 
liant red color in fall. 2 year vines, 35c; 
3 year vines, 50c. 
BOSTON IVY 
Small glossy leaves and slender stems 
which cling closely to walls. 3 year 
vines, 50c. 
SCARLET TRUMPET HONEYSUCKLE 
We consider this the most satisfactory 
climber where you want both shade 
and showy bloom. Brilliant yellow 
throated scarlet flowers nearly all sum¬ 
mer. Strong 2-year plants, 50c each. 
GOLD FLAME HONEYSUCKLE 
The ever-blooming honeysuckle. This 
is one of the choicest plants in our en¬ 
tire catalog. From June to October it 
is covered with hundreds of fragrant 
flowers, flame-scarlet outside and gold¬ 
en-yellow inside. Fine for porch, arbor, 
trellis, fence and ground cover. It is 
perfectly hardy, easy to grow, succeeds 
everywhere. Our strong No. 1 plants 
will bloom this summer. Each 60c. 
HARDY APRICOTS 
Prof. Hansen of South Dakota intro¬ 
duced these hardy apricots from North 
China in 1924 and has been improving 
them since that time. Fruit is of good 
size and of excellent quality. The trees 
have stood 40° below zero. Makes ex¬ 
cellent jam and is fine for canning. We 
have five varieties. 3 ft. trees 60c; 2 for 
$ 1 . 00 . 
The hybrid Minnesota Cherry, which is 
a cross between a plum and cherry, has 
the flavor of the cherry and is hardy 
like the native plum, and the birds do 
not bother them. They are heavy yield- 
ers and are excellent for canning. 
Oka — A very compact, vigorous grow¬ 
ing tree. It is a heavy yielder, producing 
bright red fruits of medium size. Tree is 
somewhat dwarf and can be planted 
closer together than most fruit trees. 
Sapa — A very heavy yielder. Fruit is 
large, red, with dark red flesh. One of 
Professor Hansen’s most popular intro¬ 
ductions. 
Oka and Sapa trees, 4-5 ft., 50c each 
Rocky Mountain Cherry — A small bush 
cherry growing wild in the western Da¬ 
kotas. In the natural state the fruit is 
about Yz inch in diameter. Under culti¬ 
vation and selected out for the best 
varieties it grows larger and many of 
these selected varieties make a fine fruit 
for jams and jellies. The bushes grow to 
a height of 4 to 6 feet and are just black 
with fruit. Makes an ideal pollinizer for 
the Oka and Sapa. 
2-3 ft., 30c each 
GRAPES 
Beta — The most widely grown and 
probably the most profitable grape 
grown in the Northwest. A heavy, an¬ 
nual bearer, hardy as the wild grape 
and produces heavy crops of medium 
sized fruit of extra good quality for 
juice and jelly. 2 year vines, 20c each,- 
$2.00 per 12. 
Fredonia — The new, outstanding early 
black Grape. Fredonia is the earliest 
good black Grape. The vine is vigor¬ 
ous and productive and ripens its fruit 
3 weeks earlier than Concord. The 
clusters are medium in size, cylindrical 
and very compact; berries large, round, 
and hang well to the bunch; the skin 
is thick and tough; the flesh is juicy, 
solid, but tender, and the quality is 
very good. Fredonia stands alone as 
an early heavy fruiting black Grape. 
Plant Fredonia this year and grow your 
own table grapes. 2 yr. vines, 25c each; 
$2.50 per 12. 
